A striver is the term for someone focused on positioning and rankings above actual results while an academic (as a pejorative) is an over educated nerd who tries to flex their educational chops or title to compensate for lower income comparatively. They do thing that they think makes them look interesting or deep similar to how pretty people over exaggerate on Instagram pictures.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean by non-trad family?
I'm asking because I know gay families happily living in straight-laced neighborhoods (Chevy Chase) and cul-de-sacs (Howard and AA counties).
OP here. We're a polyamorous marriage.
Rockville has been great BTW. Everyone has been super cool.
So you invite all your lovers to the family thanksgiving, eh?
Yep.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is a striver?
Was just about to ask that. What is a 'striver' as opposed to an 'academic'? A securities trader wannabe?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean by non-trad family?
I'm asking because I know gay families happily living in straight-laced neighborhoods (Chevy Chase) and cul-de-sacs (Howard and AA counties).
OP here. We're a polyamorous marriage.
Rockville has been great BTW. Everyone has been super cool.
So you invite all your lovers to the family thanksgiving, eh?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean by non-trad family?
I'm asking because I know gay families happily living in straight-laced neighborhoods (Chevy Chase) and cul-de-sacs (Howard and AA counties).
OP here. We're a polyamorous marriage.
Rockville has been great BTW. Everyone has been super cool.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We currently live in West End Rockville and love it, but we are thinking about moving near to Takoma Park (near the metro). We are pretty young (~30), have a non-traditional family, and are generally quirky people. We know some older academics and unschoolers who live in Takoma Park, and feel like we would really connect with those type of people. We can afford up to $800k.
However, I have heard that the younger families who live in Takoma Park are pretty similar to the younger families in Rockville, and don't fit the classic stereotype. Is that right?
Any related thoughts or important differences between the two areas?
Thanks!
OP, we used to live close to Rockville, and now live very close to TP. You have no business living in Rockville. Yes, TP is no longer old hippies, but Silver Spring close to Takoma Park or TP is what you want as far as vibe. Come on down and check out the farmer’s market one Sunday.
Oh come on! Do you so at the co op? Walk around downtown and the historic district? The prime demographic in Takoma Park is still old hippies. Plenty of young families but a plethora of old white women in tie dye shirts and men with long white beards.
Anonymous wrote:What is a striver?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a few different TPS due to its size. The small cute but increasingly jonesy historic area, the area behind the co-op, the barrio most people think is Langley Park, the cheap diverse homes alone Sligo park Jackson rd to just the other side of New Hampshire and last but least the maple ave projects strip of cheap apts.
There are a few hippies left near the co-op and the historic area and a few academic types emulating them but the “vibe” is more academic non-conformity than hippy nowadays. You are as likely to find a yuppie or a vegan or even an anti-Vaxer.
This sounds about right, although I'd add "the part zoned for Rolling Terrace that TP folks don't claim."
Even with some gentrification, it is still the best place I've ever lived for a "nontraditional family" or nontraditional kids. Folks aren't going to blink at any number of different family formulations. While I take the point that Hyattsville has some of the same vibe, the public school situation pushes a lot of families into parochials, which brings its own set of issues if you have a familiy that is not Husband + Wife + children.
Anonymous wrote:What do you mean by non-trad family?
I'm asking because I know gay families happily living in straight-laced neighborhoods (Chevy Chase) and cul-de-sacs (Howard and AA counties).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We currently live in West End Rockville and love it, but we are thinking about moving near to Takoma Park (near the metro). We are pretty young (~30), have a non-traditional family, and are generally quirky people. We know some older academics and unschoolers who live in Takoma Park, and feel like we would really connect with those type of people. We can afford up to $800k.
However, I have heard that the younger families who live in Takoma Park are pretty similar to the younger families in Rockville, and don't fit the classic stereotype. Is that right?
Any related thoughts or important differences between the two areas?
Thanks!
OP, we used to live close to Rockville, and now live very close to TP. You have no business living in Rockville. Yes, TP is no longer old hippies, but Silver Spring close to Takoma Park or TP is what you want as far as vibe. Come on down and check out the farmer’s market one Sunday.